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Lebesque measure zero subsets of the real line and an infinite game

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 March 2014

Marion Scheepers*
Affiliation:
Department of Mathematics, Boise State University, Boise, Idaho 83725, E-mail: marion@math.idbsu.edu

Extract

Let denote the ideal of Lebesgue measure zero subsets of the real line. Then add() denotes the minimal cardinality of a subset of whose union is not an element of . In [1] Bartoszynski gave an elegant combinatorial characterization of add(), namely: add() is the least cardinal number κ for which the following assertion fails:

For every family of at mostκ functions from ω to ω there is a function F from ω to the finite subsets of ω such that:

1. For each m, F(m) has at most m + 1 elements, and

2. for each f inthere are only finitely many m such that f(m) is not an element of F(m).

The symbol A(κ) will denote the assertion above about κ. In the course of his proof, Bartoszynski also shows that the cardinality restriction in 1 is not sharp. Indeed, let (Rm: m < ω) be any sequence of integers such that for each m Rm, ≤ Rm+1, and such that limm→∞Rm = ∞. Then the truth of the assertion A(κ) is preserved if in 1 we say instead that

1′. For each m, F(m) has at most Rm elements.

We shall use this observation later on. We now define three more statements, denoted B(κ), C(κ) and D(κ), about cardinal number κ.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Association for Symbolic Logic 1996

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References

REFERENCES

[1]Bartoszynski, T., Additivity of measure implies additivity of category, Transactions of the American Mathematical Society, vol. 281 (1984), pp. 209213.CrossRefGoogle Scholar